Yorkshire Post

Selling of Liberty’s Stocksbrid­ge steel plant is set to be reviewed

- MARK CASCI BUSINESS EDITOR ■ Email: mark.casci@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: @MarkCasci

STEEL GIANT Liberty’s plans to close its Stocksbrid­ge plant will be subjected to an independen­t review.

Liberty announced in May that up to 1,500 jobs were at risk after it confirmed it was placing its South Yorkshire aerospace and steel business on the market as part of a major restructur­ing in the wake collapse of its main financial backer, Greensill Capital.

The company is still engaged in a formal sale process meaning that its Stocksbrid­ge plant, alongside its manufactur­ing facilities in Brinsworth in South Yorkshire are to be sold. Sites in Coventry, Kiddermins­ter and Essex are also up for sale. Instead, Liberty wants to focus its attention on its Rotherham hub, where it plans to make two million tonnes of green steel.

However, The Yorkshire Post can reveal that multiple trade unions, working in concert, have secured an agreement that will see Liberty’s proposals subjected to an independen­t review.

The National Trade Union Steel Co-ordinating Committee, alongside Unite and the GMB, have convinced Liberty to submit their business plans to the union’s external experts, the Syndex consultanc­y, for what they described as “detailed analysis”. A

Liberty spokespers­on confirmed the agreement had been reached.

In a joint statement the unions said: “This crucial work will take place over the coming weeks and Syndex will tell us whether the plans stack up and what they mean for the workforce.

“This is an important developmen­t and we are pleased that Liberty has recognised the value of submitting their plans for independen­t review.

“The last few months have been full of worry and uncertaint­y for the workforce and we all have many unanswered questions. While we do not have the answers today, we now have a process to channel our questions and pursue our concerns.

“Rest assured, if we believe Liberty’s plans fall short the unions will be representi­ng our members’ interests and vigorously challengin­g the company.”

Liberty confirmed earlier this week that it is still looking for a buyer for its South Yorkshire factories and that it was “continuing to assess a sales process”.

Bosses have been looking for a buyer for the site for more than a month amid pressure on the GFG Alliance, of which Liberty Steel is a part.

GFG had borrowed heavily from Greensill Capital, a supply chain finance lender, racking up multibilli­on-dollar arrangemen­ts. But administra­tors for Greensill now want that money back after the lender collapsed in March, forcing GFG to refinance its operations.

The joint statement added: “The unions have been clear Liberty must first convince the workforce that their plans will secure jobs and the future of every UK site. We’ve all heard Sanjeev Gupta promising that none of our plants will close on his watch – and we will hold him to that commitment.”

Meanwhile GFG said it is progressin­g in its bid to refinance part of its Australian operations. A potential deal with business lender White Oak will be enough to pay the unit’s Greensill debt in full, GFG said.

A Liberty Steel spokespers­on said: “Liberty Steel’s board and management are working with employees, and their representa­tives, suppliers, customers and others to secure a sustainabl­e future for the UK businesses. One aspect of that work is recognisin­g and utilising the value that Syndex – acting on behalf of trade unions – can bring to securing that future.”

The last few months have been full of worry and uncertaint­y. Joint statement from the NTUSCC, GMB and Unite on the future of Liberty.

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